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Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.58bln T-bills end-week
Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.58bln T-bills end-week

Zawya

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.58bln T-bills end-week

Cairo – The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) auctioned treasury bills (T-bills) at a total value of EGP 80 billion through two offerings on Thursday, 19 June. The first tranche stood at EGP 40 billion, holding a tenor of 182 days until 23 December 2025, according to official data. With the same value, the second auction will mature in 364 days on 23 June 2026. Earlier this week, the central bank issued T-bills worth EGP 60 billion through two auctions. All Rights Reserved - Mubasher Info © 2005 - 2022 Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (

Senate passes landmark GENIUS stablecoin bill, giving crypto industry its first major win
Senate passes landmark GENIUS stablecoin bill, giving crypto industry its first major win

CNBC

time17-06-2025

  • Business
  • CNBC

Senate passes landmark GENIUS stablecoin bill, giving crypto industry its first major win

The Senate on Tuesday passed the GENIUS Act, a landmark bill that for the first time establishes federal guardrails for U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins and creates a regulated pathway for private companies to issue digital dollars with the blessing of the federal government. The bill passed with a 68-30 vote. It's a milestone day for the crypto industry and for President Donald Trump's sprawling digital asset empire. This is the first legislative victory for the digital asset industry, which put around $250 million in the 2024 cycle to elect what's now considered to be the most pro-crypto Congress in U.S. history. The bill still faces hurdles in the Republican-held House, but passage in the Senate signals a turning point — not just for the technology, but for the political clout behind it. The GENIUS Act, short for the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, sets guardrails for the industry, including full reserve backing, monthly audits, and anti-money laundering compliance. It also opens the door to a broader range of issuers, including banks, fintechs, and major retailers looking to launch their own stablecoins or integrate them into existing payment systems. The bill grants sweeping authority to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who last week told a Senate appropriations subcommittee in a hearing that the U.S. stablecoin market could grow nearly eightfold to over $2 trillion in the next few years. "Stablecoin legislation backed by U.S. Treasuries or T-bills will create a market that will expand U.S. dollar usage via these stablecoins all around the world," Bessent said. GENIUS now heads to the House, which has its own version of a stablecoin bill dubbed STABLE. Both prohibit yield-bearing consumer stablecoins — but diverge on who regulates what. The Senate's version centralizes oversight with Treasury, while the House splits authority between the Federal Reserve, the Comptroller of the Currency, and others. Reconciling the two could take a while, according to Congressional aides. The GENIUS Act was supposed to be the easiest crypto bill to pass, but took months to reach the Senate floor, failed once, and passed only after fierce negotiations. "We thought it would be easiest to start with stablecoins," Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., said on stage in Las Vegas at this year's Bitcoin 2025 conference, which focused heavily on stablecoins. "It has been extremely difficult. I had no idea how hard this was going to be," she said. At the same event, Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., echoed the frustration: "It has been murder to get them there," he said of the 18 Senate Democrats who ultimately crossed the aisle. Stablecoins are a subset of cryptocurrencies pegged to the value of real-world assets. About 99% of all stablecoins are tethered to the price of the U.S. dollar. The appeal is simple: Stablecoins offer instant settlement and lower transaction fees, cutting out the middlemen and directly threatening legacy payment rails. Shopify has already rolled out USDC-powered payments through Coinbase and Stripe. Bank of America's CEO said last week at a Morgan Stanley conference that they're having conversations with the industry and individually exploring stablecoin issuance. Payment stocks like Visa, Mastercard, PayPal, and Block slid after The Wall Street Journal reported that Amazon and Walmart are exploring their own stablecoins. That action has helped drive Circle's blockbuster stock surge, with shares up 400% since its public debut on June 5. Deutsche Bank found that stablecoin transactions hit $28 trillion last year, surpassing that of Mastercard and Visa, combined. Still, there are limits. The GENIUS Act limits non-financial Big Tech companies from directly issuing stablecoins unless they establish or partner with regulated financial entities — a provision meant to blunt monopoly concerns. JPMorgan, meanwhile, is taking a different route, launching JPMD, a deposit token designed to function like a stablecoin but tightly integrated with the traditional banking system. Issued on Coinbase's Base blockchain, JPMD is only available to institutional clients and offers features like 24/7 settlement and interest payments — part of the broader push by legacy finance to adapt to the stablecoin era without ceding ground to crypto-native firms. While Democrats tried to amend the bill to prevent the president from profiting off crypto ventures, the final legislation only bars members of Congress and their families from doing so. Trump's first financial disclosure as president, released Friday, revealed he earned at least $57 million in 2024 alone from token sales tied to World Liberty Financial, a crypto platform closely aligned with his political brand. He holds nearly 16 billion WLFI governance tokens — the crypto equivalent of voting shares — which could be worth close to $1 billion on paper, based on prior private sales. That's just one slice of the Trump crypto pie. The family's ventures, which include the controversial $TRUMP meme coin, a $2.5 billion bitcoin Treasury and proposed bitcoin and ether ETFs via and a newly launched mining firm called American Bitcoin, reflect a full-throttle push into digital finance. Forbes recently estimated Trump's crypto holdings at nearly $1 billion, lifting his total net worth to $5.6 billion.

Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.81bln T-bills on Thursday
Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.81bln T-bills on Thursday

Zawya

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

Central Bank of Egypt unveils $1.81bln T-bills on Thursday

Cairo – The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) auctioned treasury bills (T-bills) at a total value of EGP 90 billion through two issues on Thursday, 12 June. The first tranche stood at EGP 45 billion, holding a tenor of 182 days until 16 December 2025, according to official data. Issued with the same value, the second offering will mature in 364 days on 16 June 2026. All Rights Reserved - Mubasher Info © 2005 - 2022 Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (

Stablecoins' step toward mainstream could shake up parts of US Treasury market
Stablecoins' step toward mainstream could shake up parts of US Treasury market

Reuters

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Stablecoins' step toward mainstream could shake up parts of US Treasury market

June 6 (Reuters) - As stablecoins take a step toward becoming mainstream, some segments of the U.S. Treasury market, notably securities with short-term maturities, could be vulnerable to volatility as they become more closely tied to the world of cryptocurrency. Congress is poised to pass legislation establishing a regulatory framework for stablecoins, expected to help legitimize the dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies which are commonly used by crypto traders to move funds between tokens. Proponents of the bill argue that clear rules will spur further stablecoin activity, and support a growing sector of buyers of short-term U.S. government debt, or T-bills, that are typically considered cash-equivalent securities. But others worry a larger footprint for a relatively new and more volatile industry could in turn spur volatility in the bills market. "In the event of a sudden loss of confidence, regulatory pressure, or market rumors, this could trigger large-scale liquidations, potentially depressing Treasury prices and disrupting fixed-income markets," said Cristiano Ventricelli, vice president and senior analyst of digital assets at Moody's Ratings. "A problem in the stablecoin sector could spill over into broader financial markets, affecting institutions holding similar assets or (that) rely on stablecoin liquidity," he added. If signed into law, the stablecoin bill would require tokens to be backed by liquid assets - like U.S. dollars and short-term Treasury bills - and monthly disclosures from issuers on the composition of their reserves. That means if stablecoins are expected to grow, issuers will have to purchase more T-bills to back their assets. The bill could be passed by the Senate as early as next week and could eventually increase the amount of U.S. Treasuries held by stablecoin issuers such as Tether and Circle, the latter of which debuted on the NYSE on Thursday. They together hold $166 billion in U.S. Treasuries, according to a report by Bain & Company's financial services practice. The stablecoin market, currently about $247 billion according to crypto data provider CoinGecko, could grow to $2 trillion by 2028 if legislation were to pass, Standard Chartered estimated. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent encouraged lawmakers to pass legislation to codify federal rules for stablecoins, arguing that it could lead to a surge in demand for U.S. government debt. Currently, there are about $29 trillion in Treasury securities outstanding, of which $6 trillion are bills. In an April research note, JP Morgan analysts estimated that stablecoin issuers could become the third-largest buyer of Treasury bills in the coming years. That raises red flags for some, who worry that would lead to closer ties between the crypto ecosystem and the traditional financial world. The Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee, a group of banks and investors that advise the government on its funding, said in a study in April that growth of the stablecoin market at the expense of bank deposits could reduce banks' demand for U.S. Treasuries, as well as have an impact on credit growth. "If (stablecoin issuers) have to move those Treasuries quickly, or the market demands that, it could create some credit crunches there," said Mark Hays, associate director for cryptocurrency and financial technology at Americans for Financial Reform. Hays said this assumes that stablecoins become more widely used after legislation passes. Money market funds, which invest in short-term debt, could be impacted. Money market expert Pete Crane, president of Crane Data, said money funds are watching stablecoin closely but the size of the market would have to become significantly bigger to create concerns over financial stability. "Treasury bills are normally so short (in maturity) that people don't concern themselves with price movements, but of course in case of a rapid liquidation the price is going to go down," he said. Issues with stablecoins have not so far been large enough to cause systemic problems but the calculus could shift if federal legislation were to spur widespread adoption. In 2022, a meltdown in the crypto markets sent Tether's stablecoin below its dollar peg, which caused no impact on the Treasury market. At the time, then-U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said stablecoins like Tether didn't pose a systemic risk to the financial system because they were too small in scale. In 2023, Circle's USD Coin also lost its dollar peg after the company revealed it held a portion of its reserves at failed Silicon Valley Bank. Circle and Tether declined comment. Still, some argue that there could be benefits from increasing demand for government debt. "If we pass stablecoin legislation, dollars will be exported around the world, which will extend the strength of the dollar as the world's reserve currency," said Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, a crypto asset manager. Roger Hallam, global head of rates at Vanguard, said higher demand for short-term government debt instruments could incentivize the Treasury Department to increase T-bill issuance, rather than long-dated debt, to cover its deficit funding need. Yields of long-dated U.S. debt have been rising recently, partly due to concerns over the country's fiscal health. "You could choose to issue more bills to meet that demand, which would relieve some of the tensions we currently see in the market ... around the scale of future issues and who's going to buy all these bonds," Hallam said.

Investors Follow Warren Buffett to Ramp Ultrashort Treasury Bets as Longer-Term Bills Face Volatility
Investors Follow Warren Buffett to Ramp Ultrashort Treasury Bets as Longer-Term Bills Face Volatility

Int'l Business Times

time02-06-2025

  • Business
  • Int'l Business Times

Investors Follow Warren Buffett to Ramp Ultrashort Treasury Bets as Longer-Term Bills Face Volatility

Investors are more attracted to the ultrashort fixed-income market opportunity as the iShares 0-3 month Treasury bond ETF and the SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF witnessed inflows of over £18.47 billion ($25 billion) in assets in 2025. Meanwhile, Vanguard's short-term bond ETF witnessed inflows of more than £2.95 billion ($4 billion) year-to-date. The emerging investor trend of preferring the shorter end of the fixed-income market aligns with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway doubling its ownership of T-bills to own 5% of all short-term Treasuries. BondBloxx CEO Joanna Gallegos told CNBC that volatility is less on the "short and middle end" with stable yields, but bond jitters remain on the long end as the 20-year treasury has 'gone from negative to positive five times so far this year.' The 3-month T-Bill is paying 4.345% at an annualised rate, while the two-year treasury is at 3.9% and the 10-year at around 4.4%. The current bond market volatility comes nine months after the US Federal Reserve started trimming interest rates. However, the Fed has paused its campaign due to concerns about inflation rising again on the US government's tariff play. Moreover, market concerns about federal spending and government deficit levels have further fueled the volatility in the bond market. Strategas Securities' Todd Sohn said that 'long duration just doesn't work right now,' citing long-term treasuries and corporate bonds have recorded negative performance since September 2024, which happens to be a rare phenomenon. 'The only other time that's happened in modern times was during the Financial Crisis,' he said. 'It is hard to argue against short-term duration bonds right now.' The ETF specialist added that he recommends that clients avoid any bond instruments with a duration above seven years. Investors Overlooking Fixed-Income Assets in Their Portfolios Gallegos is worried that investors are not adequately prioritising fixed-income instruments in their portfolio mix amid the bond market volatility. 'My fear is investors are not diversifying their portfolios with bonds today, and investors still have an equity addiction to concentrated, broad-based indexes that are overweight certain tech names. They get used to these double-digit returns,' she said. US stock market volatility peaked this year after the S&P 500 jumped to record highs in February but tanked 20% in April amid the tariff episode before rebounding to make up for all the recent losses. While Sohn acknowledged that bonds are a crucial part of long-term investing and offer a hedge against stock market volatility, he now thinks it might be time for investors to explore options beyond the US. 'International equities are contributing to portfolios like they haven't done in a decade,' he said. 'Last year was Japanese equities, this year, it is European equities. Investors don't have to be loaded up on US large-cap growth right now,' he said. The S&P 500 posted over 20% returns in 2023 and 2024, but the iShares MSCI Eurozone ETF has gained 25% YTD, while the iShares MSCI Japan ETF jumped over 25% in the last two years and is up 10% in 2025. Disclaimer: Our digital media content is for informational purposes only and not investment advice. Please conduct your own analysis or seek professional advice before investing. Remember, investments are subject to market risks and past performance doesn't indicate future returns. Originally published on IBTimes UK

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